TechGeniux is proud to share the most innovative startups you haven’t heard about in 2015 top 10 list. These startups are developing amazing new technologies and services that are making life easier for all of us. From mobile shopping to online banking our top 10 list will explore the these ground-breaking companies services, technology and investment valuations. With all that said…Drum roll….

1. DoorDash- This startup is on fire, DoorDash deliver food from local restaurants. DoorDash is an on-demand delivery service that connects customers with local businesses. Through the DoorDash marketplace, people can purchase goods from local merchants and have them delivered in less in 45 minutes or less. The company has already raised $60 million dollars at a reported $600 million valuation. This startup hires its own drivers which allow restaurants that don’t have drivers appear on the company’s app. With notable investors include Pejman Mar Ventures, Caufield & Byers, Sequoia Capital and Y Combinator. The upside for this startup looks great with major players like Google and Amazon looking to be major players in the on-demand delivery business.

2.Docker-Docker is a open platform for distributed applications for developers. The platform allow developers to build, ship and run Docker container-based applications inside your firewall. Here is another remarkable startup that changes the space for developers. Docker enables apps to be quickly assembled from components and eliminates the friction between development, QA, and production environments. As a result, IT can ship faster and run the same app, unchanged, on laptops, data center VMs, and any cloud. This startup has raised $55 million on a reported $400 million valuation. With notable investors like AME Cloud Ventures, Lowercase Capital, Y Combinator, Greylock Partners, Insight Ventures Partners, Trinity Ventures and Sequoia Capital.

3. Kreditech-This startup is about to change how you bank and obtain loans. Imagine obtaining a loan in a matter of seconds. With the Kreditech system loans don’t hinge on outdated credit score systems, their system is based on the borrows online footprint and data information. Kreditech already has 2 million customers and growing daily. Kreditech is growing at 70 to 80% per quarter, that’s more than 1000% per year. So how does Kreditech work? The startup uses a self-learning algorithm to analyze data. The algorithm is capable of calculating an individual’s credit score in seconds using up to 20,000 data points. Some key investors firms include HPE Growth Capital, Blumberg Capital, Point Nine Capital, Kreos Capital and Global Founders Capital. The company has raised $269 million with a current valuation of $159 million.

4. Raise-This new startup offer a marketplace for unused gift cards. Raise give users the ability to save on gift cards, before you shop online or in stores, check out the Raise marketplace to find discounted gift cards for the top brands. Customers can buy or sell their gift cards on the Raise marketplace with a few simple steps. The startup has raised an amazing $87 million on a reported valuation of $500 million! Here are some of the notable investors for Raise is Bessemer Venture Partners, New Enterprise Associates and Accel Partners.

5.Zenefits-Zenefits is a free online HR Software gives your team a single place to manage all your human resource needs — payroll, benefits, health insurance and compliance. This startup has over 10,000 companies using it’s free service to manage over 100,000 employees. Zenefits has been identified as one of the fastest growing software as a service companies in history. This company has raised $84 million from very notable investors such as Y Combinator, Venrock, Andressen Horowitz, General Catalyst Partners and Institutional Venture Partners. The startup has a whooping reported $500 million valuation.

6. Wish (app)-Shopping has never been so easy with the mobile shopping platform Wish. The startup has over 30 million customers buying goods from its store. This startup is definitely making people take notice with astonishing investments of $78 million from notable investors GGV, Founders Fund, Formation 8 and Felicis Ventures. With a reported valuation of $1 to $3 billion this is definitely a startup to keep your eye on this mobile shopping platform in 2015!

7. Teespring- This e-commerce platform is the 100% free way to sell high-quality t-shirts. Have an idea for a t-shirt? Customers can design t-shirts with ease, just design a shirt in Teespring easy designer, set a price, add a goal and start selling! Once you collect enough pre-orders and Teespring will print & ship directly to buyers, and the designer (you) keep the profit. This evolutionary platform has raised $55 million from key investors such as Y Combinator, Andressen Horowitz and Khosla Ventures with a reported $94 million.

8. Beepi- This startup is a online-marketplace for used cars. The next generation of buying and selling cars will start with Beepi amazing platform. The process is simple, register your car on Beepi website, share basic information on your car. Once Beepi has all the information on your car the company will dispatch a professional pre-purchase inspection. Once your car has passed the inspection Beepi will send your car info to their community for bids. Here is the kicker, the startup will come and pick up your car once sold, and deliver to the buyer. The company has several key investors Redpoint Venture and Foundation Capital. This startup has a bright future with total current investments of $79 million with a $200 million valuation.

9. Blue Apron- Feeling hunger…well with Blue Apron has you covered with its subscription meal service. This hot startup has already surpassed 1 million meals in one month. There is absolutely a big market for fresh farmed foods with a reasonable cost. Blue Apron has raised a whooping $58 million to serve you and has a Rolex of notable investors such as Bessemer Venture Partners and First Round Capital. Some reports also claim that the startup has an incredible $500 million valuation.

10. Cyanogen-CyanogenMod is open source firmware based on android mobile platform used with smart phones and tablet computers. The unique features provided by CyanogenMod are not offered by vendor of such devices in other firmware distributions. Even with the public disagreement with Xiaomi the young software startup is focus on working with others mobile vendors to get its custom OS on other devices. The amazing hot startup has raised around $110 million from notable venture capital firms such as Benchmark, Redpoint Ventures, Andressen Horowitz and Tencent Holdings. The company has a current valuation close to $1 billion.

There you have it, the top 10 startups you need to know for 2015. Look for more TechGeniux startups and entrepreneurs list on companies and people that are changing the world.

Categories

Preorder Here!

Top Stories:

Back in 2016 a startup called SearchInk, launched out of Berlin with the aim of combining machine learning with handwriting recognition. The upshot would be the ability to semantically label handwritten documents. Pretty nifty. It went on to raise €4.2 million in seed funding, but after developing this AI to read hard-written documents, it went in search of a market and business model. Not an easy thing to do. After all, what industry needs hand-written documents read at scale, when so many documents today are born digital in the first place? It turns out there was one after-all: the insurance industry.
In that sector, claims forms, emails and invoices are currently processed manually. But CEO and co-founder Sofie Quidenus-Wahlforss realised that her company’s technology could significantly reduce the time and cost spent on administrative tasks, as well as the risk of human error.
So today, SearchInk rebrands as omni:us, a next generation AI service with two main products aimed squarely at the insurance industry: omni:us Claim and omni:us Policy. The idea is to be able to process digital documents, some of which contain handwriting, by classifying them and extracting the valuable data.
Omni:us is launching these products first in the DACH region, and claims to be working with over half of the top 10 insurance providers. It also says it can deploy its claims management and policy extraction products into an organisation within a matter of weeks. It’s now raise a total of $6.5 million from individual angels and VC, including Anthemis.
Quidenus-Wahlforss said: “Industry predictions show that insurance data will grow by 94% in 2018, 84% of which will be in highly variable documentation. However, in the future, there is also huge potential to apply omni:us technology to many other diverse industries such as finance, manufacturing, transportation and healthcare.”
She added that “We see customers improving their claims turn around time by 80% and all of that at 75% of the original costs. Why is this the case? Fundamentally, because with omni:us manual interventions can be reduced to a minimum, due to the supervised machine learning approach. One of our clients could speed up the comparison by an average 90% at only 80% of the costs.”
Furthermore, the AI could analyze policies with an annual value of only 250 Euro, which normally be a waste of a human being’s time and effort.
Omni:us is now in the process of raising a further funding round this year, opening an office in the US and growing its team.
... Read More

VentureFriends, the Athens-based VC that has backed the likes of Homie and Weengs, is announcing its new fund, with a first closing of €45 million.
‘VentureFriends II’ sees the VC firm pick up where its original €20 million fund left off, with a remit to do seed investments in Greek startups and beyond that have global ambitions.
Specifically, the VC fund, which counts LPs as the European Investment Fund, the Greek ESIF FoF, Equifund and several individuals and family offices, is on the look out for seed-stage tech startups in its sweet spot of e-marketplaces, e-commerce, and SaaS.
I’m told it plans to write a company’s first cheque of up to €1 million. There’s also the option to add another €5 million to the fund, with a final closing target of €50 million, although this may not come to fruition.
Notably, VentureFriends’ second fund has already disclosed a first investment, participating in Stasher’s recent funding round. The startup (formerly known as CityStasher) is billed as an ‘Airbnb for luggage’ and offers a network of brick and mortar businesses across Europe that will store your luggage for a few hours in between commutes.
Meanwhile, the two year-old ‘VentureFriends I’ made 21 investments during its lifetime, which feels like a pretty rapid deployment of capital. These have mostly been in Greece-based startups with an international outlook, including Blueground, a company offering high-quality mid-term accommodation for business executives ad expats. The company manages over 700 properties in New York, Dubai, Athens and Istanbul.
Another example cited by VentureFriends is Welcomepickups, which two years into existence is now present in 20 cities in Europe and Asia. The startup can be thought of as a travel concierge, spanning transfer services, essential products, pre-ordered tickets to top attractions, tips and tailor-made experiences led by locals.
The two Partners of VentureFriends are Apostolos Apostolakis and George Dimopoulos. Apostolakis previously co-founded e-shop.gr, the first e-tailer in Greece, and in 2011 he co-founded e-food, a food delivery marketplace acquired in 2015 by Delivery Hero, providing a major exit for the Greek startup ecosystem. He and Dimopoulos were also among the first angel investors in Taxibeat, the taxi app that sold to Daimler in February 2017.
... Read More

Back in 2016 a startup called SearchInk, launched out of Berlin with the aim of combining machine learning with handwriting recognition. The upshot would be the ability to semantically label handwritten documents. Pretty nifty. It went on to raise €4.2 million in seed funding, but after developing this AI to read hard-written documents, it went in search of a market and business model. Not an easy thing to do. After all, what industry needs hand-written documents read at scale, when so many documents today are born digital in the first place? It turns out there was one after-all: the insurance industry.
In that sector, claims forms, emails and invoices are currently processed manually. But CEO and co-founder Sofie Quidenus-Wahlforss realised that her company’s technology could significantly reduce the time and cost spent on administrative tasks, as well as the risk of human error.
So today, SearchInk rebrands as omni:us, a next generation AI service with two main products aimed squarely at the insurance industry: omni:us Claim and omni:us Policy. The idea is to be able to process digital documents, some of which contain handwriting, by classifying them and extracting the valuable data.
Omni:us is launching these products first in the DACH region, and claims to be working with over half of the top 10 insurance providers. It also says it can deploy its claims management and policy extraction products into an organisation within a matter of weeks. It’s now raise a total of $6.5 million from individual angels and VC, including Anthemis.
Quidenus-Wahlforss said: “Industry predictions show that insurance data will grow by 94% in 2018, 84% of which will be in highly variable documentation. However, in the future, there is also huge potential to apply omni:us technology to many other diverse industries such as finance, manufacturing, transportation and healthcare.”
She added that “We see customers improving their claims turn around time by 80% and all of that at 75% of the original costs. Why is this the case? Fundamentally, because with omni:us manual interventions can be reduced to a minimum, due to the supervised machine learning approach. One of our clients could speed up the comparison by an average 90% at only 80% of the costs.”
Furthermore, the AI could analyze policies with an annual value of only 250 Euro, which normally be a waste of a human being’s time and effort.
Omni:us is now in the process of raising a further funding round this year, opening an office in the US and growing its team.
... Read More

VentureFriends, the Athens-based VC that has backed the likes of Homie and Weengs, is announcing its new fund, with a first closing of €45 million.
‘VentureFriends II’ sees the VC firm pick up where its original €20 million fund left off, with a remit to do seed investments in Greek startups and beyond that have global ambitions.
Specifically, the VC fund, which counts LPs as the European Investment Fund, the Greek ESIF FoF, Equifund and several individuals and family offices, is on the look out for seed-stage tech startups in its sweet spot of e-marketplaces, e-commerce, and SaaS.
I’m told it plans to write a company’s first cheque of up to €1 million. There’s also the option to add another €5 million to the fund, with a final closing target of €50 million, although this may not come to fruition.
Notably, VentureFriends’ second fund has already disclosed a first investment, participating in Stasher’s recent funding round. The startup (formerly known as CityStasher) is billed as an ‘Airbnb for luggage’ and offers a network of brick and mortar businesses across Europe that will store your luggage for a few hours in between commutes.
Meanwhile, the two year-old ‘VentureFriends I’ made 21 investments during its lifetime, which feels like a pretty rapid deployment of capital. These have mostly been in Greece-based startups with an international outlook, including Blueground, a company offering high-quality mid-term accommodation for business executives ad expats. The company manages over 700 properties in New York, Dubai, Athens and Istanbul.
Another example cited by VentureFriends is Welcomepickups, which two years into existence is now present in 20 cities in Europe and Asia. The startup can be thought of as a travel concierge, spanning transfer services, essential products, pre-ordered tickets to top attractions, tips and tailor-made experiences led by locals.
The two Partners of VentureFriends are Apostolos Apostolakis and George Dimopoulos. Apostolakis previously co-founded e-shop.gr, the first e-tailer in Greece, and in 2011 he co-founded e-food, a food delivery marketplace acquired in 2015 by Delivery Hero, providing a major exit for the Greek startup ecosystem. He and Dimopoulos were also among the first angel investors in Taxibeat, the taxi app that sold to Daimler in February 2017.
... Read More

<p>Back in 2016 a startup called SearchInk, launched out of Berlin with the aim of combining machine learning with handwriting recognition. The upshot would be the ability to semantically label handwritten documents. Pretty nifty. It went on to raise €4.2 million in seed funding, but after developing this AI to read hard-written documents, it went in search of a market and business model. Not an easy thing to do. After all, what industry needs hand-written documents read at scale, when so many documents today are born digital in the first place? It turns out there was one after-all: the insurance industry.</p>
<p>In that sector, claims forms, emails and invoices are currently processed manually. But CEO and co-founder Sofie Quidenus-Wahlforss realised that her company’s technology could significantly reduce the time and cost spent on administrative tasks, as well as the risk of human error.</p>
<p>So today, SearchInk rebrands as <a href="https://omnius.com/">omni:us</a>, a next generation AI service with two main products aimed squarely at the insurance industry: <a class="crunchbase-link" href="https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/omni/" target="_blank">omni:us <span class="crunchbase-tooltip-indicator"></span></a> Claim and omni:us Policy. The idea is to be able to process digital documents, some of which contain handwriting, by classifying them and extracting the valuable data.</p>
<p>Omni:us is launching these products first in the DACH region, and claims to be working with over half of the top 10 insurance providers. It also says it can deploy its claims management and policy extraction products into an organisation within a matter of weeks. It’s now raise a total of $6.5 million from individual angels and VC, including Anthemis.</p>
<p>Quidenus-Wahlforss said: “Industry predictions show that insurance data will grow by 94% in 2018, 84% of which will be in highly variable documentation. However, in the future, there is also huge potential to apply omni:us technology to many other diverse industries such as finance, manufacturing, transportation and healthcare.”</p>
<p>She added that “We see customers improving their claims turn around time by 80% and all of that at 75% of the original costs. Why is this the case? Fundamentally, because with omni:us manual interventions can be reduced to a minimum, due to the supervised machine learning approach. One of our clients could speed up the comparison by an average 90% at only 80% of the costs.”</p>
<p>Furthermore, the AI could analyze policies with an annual value of only 250 Euro, which normally be a waste of a human being’s time and effort.</p>
<p>Omni:us is now in the process of raising a further funding round this year, opening an office in the US and growing its team.</p>
<div class="feedflare">
<a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=LMM9Mpjs28M:BMsEa_YJ4gM:2mJPEYqXBVI"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?d=2mJPEYqXBVI" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=LMM9Mpjs28M:BMsEa_YJ4gM:7Q72WNTAKBA"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?d=7Q72WNTAKBA" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=LMM9Mpjs28M:BMsEa_YJ4gM:yIl2AUoC8zA"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?d=yIl2AUoC8zA" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=LMM9Mpjs28M:BMsEa_YJ4gM:-BTjWOF_DHI"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?i=LMM9Mpjs28M:BMsEa_YJ4gM:-BTjWOF_DHI" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=LMM9Mpjs28M:BMsEa_YJ4gM:D7DqB2pKExk"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?i=LMM9Mpjs28M:BMsEa_YJ4gM:D7DqB2pKExk" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=LMM9Mpjs28M:BMsEa_YJ4gM:qj6IDK7rITs"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?d=qj6IDK7rITs" border="0"></img></a>
</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~4/LMM9Mpjs28M" height="1" width="1" alt="" />... Read More

<p><a href="http://www.venturefriends.vc/">VentureFriends</a>, the Athens-based VC that has backed the likes of <a href="https://techcrunch.com/2018/02/20/homie/">Homie</a> and <a href="https://techcrunch.com/2016/10/23/weengs/">Weengs</a>, is announcing its new fund, with a first closing of €45 million.</p>
<p>‘<a class="crunchbase-link" href="https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/venturefriends/" target="_blank">VentureFriends <span class="crunchbase-tooltip-indicator"></span></a> II’ sees the VC firm pick up where its <a href="https://techcrunch.com/2017/05/03/venturefriends/">original €20 million fund</a> left off, with a remit to do seed investments in <a href="http://tech.eu/features/18161/athens-greece-startup-ecosystem-report/">Greek startups and beyond</a> that have global ambitions.</p>
<p>Specifically, the VC fund, which counts LPs as the European Investment Fund, the Greek ESIF FoF, Equifund and several individuals and family offices, is on the look out for seed-stage tech startups in its sweet spot of e-marketplaces, e-commerce, and SaaS.</p>
<p>I’m told it plans to write a company’s first cheque of up to €1 million. There’s also the option to add another €5 million to the fund, with a final closing target of €50 million, although this may not come to fruition.</p>
<p>Notably, VentureFriends’ second fund has already disclosed a first investment, participating in Stasher’s recent funding round. The startup (<a href="https://techcrunch.com/2018/01/09/citystasher/">formerly known as CityStasher</a>) is billed as an ‘Airbnb for luggage’ and offers a network of brick and mortar businesses across Europe that will store your luggage for a few hours in between commutes.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the two year-old ‘VentureFriends I’ made 21 investments during its lifetime, which feels like a pretty rapid deployment of capital. These have mostly been in Greece-based startups with an international outlook, including Blueground, a company offering high-quality mid-term accommodation for business executives ad expats. The company manages over 700 properties in New York, Dubai, Athens and Istanbul.</p>
<p>Another example cited by VentureFriends is Welcomepickups, which two years into existence is now present in 20 cities in Europe and Asia. The startup can be thought of as a travel concierge, spanning transfer services, essential products, pre-ordered tickets to top attractions, tips and tailor-made experiences led by locals.</p>
<p>The two Partners of VentureFriends are Apostolos Apostolakis and George Dimopoulos. Apostolakis previously co-founded e-shop.gr, the first e-tailer in Greece, and in 2011 he co-founded e-food, a food delivery marketplace acquired in 2015 by Delivery Hero, providing a major exit for the Greek startup ecosystem. He and Dimopoulos were also among the first angel investors in Taxibeat, the taxi app that <a href="https://techcrunch.com/2017/01/27/daimler-close-to-buying-taxibeat-in-greece-for-around-43m/">sold to Daimler in February 2017</a>.</p>
<div class="feedflare">
<a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=01B29ewfaDk:0_C6WHnorhY:2mJPEYqXBVI"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?d=2mJPEYqXBVI" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=01B29ewfaDk:0_C6WHnorhY:7Q72WNTAKBA"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?d=7Q72WNTAKBA" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=01B29ewfaDk:0_C6WHnorhY:yIl2AUoC8zA"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?d=yIl2AUoC8zA" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=01B29ewfaDk:0_C6WHnorhY:-BTjWOF_DHI"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?i=01B29ewfaDk:0_C6WHnorhY:-BTjWOF_DHI" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=01B29ewfaDk:0_C6WHnorhY:D7DqB2pKExk"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?i=01B29ewfaDk:0_C6WHnorhY:D7DqB2pKExk" border="0"></img></a> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?a=01B29ewfaDk:0_C6WHnorhY:qj6IDK7rITs"><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~ff/Techcrunch?d=qj6IDK7rITs" border="0"></img></a>
</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/Techcrunch/~4/01B29ewfaDk" height="1" width="1" alt="" />... Read More